CRANFIELD, UK -Cranfield University has embarked on a major research project, funded by the Water Research Foundation (WRF), focused on the implementation of risk management practice in international water utilities.
The $300,000 project, called Real-life enterprise resilience, aims to develop a toolkit of resources including an interactive i-book, based on academic research, for practical use by utility managers in the field.
The resources developed by the project are designed to enable the management of extrinsic threats and systemic risk, support the development of proactive adaptation strategies, while creating long-term strategic value with stakeholders.
The University said: “This will subsequently provide senior and executive management with cutting-edge advances to ensure their companies can operate efficiently and prosperously in the decades ahead.”
Cranfield’s work will support the recent call from the Effective Utility Management Steering Group – a consortium of leading US bodies with strategic interests in utility governance – who have called for “enterprise resiliency”; a utility-wide, strategic approach to organisational resilience.
Project partners who have provided funding include; City of Calgary (Canada), Seattle Public Utilities (US), Water Corporation (Australia), EPCOR (Canada), SA Water (Australia), Scottish Water (Scotland), EPAL (Portugal), UKWIR Limited (UK), Yorkshire Water (England), Northern Ireland Water (Northern Ireland), and Thames Water (England).
Dr Simon Jude, Cranfield Institute for Resilient Futures and principal investigator, said; “The desire for resilient water utilities has become an international keystone of utility governance. This project aims to close the gap between regulatory calls for greater resilience, academic thinking and practical application. This is applicable, hard science for the workers in the field and executives in the board room, with the purpose of delivering a more sustainable, resilient water supply for future generations.”
Rob Pritchard, general manager, Utilities & Environmental Protection for the City of Calgary, said: “Utility companies rely on the WRF and others to translate academic concepts into usable tools in practical formats. While there is a plethora of resilience programs and projects, even at the international level, there is no practice-led resource for water utility managers that supports a response to regulatory calls for improved resiliency. This project will address that need, and Calgary citizens will benefit as a result.”
###
Read more
Nano membrane toilet helps Cranfield University win Queen’s anniversary prize
Water reuse: It’s time to wake Europe’s sleeping giant